Dialogue on the theme for the twenty-fifth session of the Governing Council

UN-Habitat’s Contribution to the Post-2015 Development Agenda in Order to Promote Sustainable Urban Development and Human Settlements

Tuesday 21 April 10:00-13:00 and 15:00-18:00  |  UN Gigiri, Conference Room 2

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BackgroundSDG -11 Target FrameworkProposed Action Entry PointsAgendaBios

In its final report, the Open Working Group on Sustainable Development Goals recommended that sustainable cities and human settlements be addressed as a standalone goal, and the General Assembly decided that the proposal of the Open Working Group contained in the report would serve as the main basis for integrating sustainable development goals into the post-2015 development agenda. Goal 11, the proposed standalone goal, is to “make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable.” In its resolution 24/10, the Governing Council requested the Executive Director, in consultation with the Committee of Permanent Representatives, to ensure that UN-Habitat contributed to the development and implementation of the post-2015 development agenda in order to promote sustainable urbanization. Accordingly, UN-Habitat provides information to Governments and the United Nations system on the role of urbanization to ensure that it is adequately reflected in the post-2015 development agenda, including the sustainable development goals.

Urbanization is a potential source of development because a planned city is an engine of economic growth that generates wealth, improves living standards and as well acts as a locus for technological innovations. Properly managed, urbanization like the forces of industrialization that transformed the modern world could arguably be one of the most important phenomena of the 21st century. Urbanization can foster rapid rates of productivity growth but we do know that as a human construct, the process must be guided by well-constructed institutions in ways that make our cities and towns work to enhance higher quality of life through employment generation and inclusive growth.  For example, economies of agglomeration or clustering bring the factors of production into spatial proximity, optimize specialization through the formation of knowledge networks and in the end increase the relative size of urban markets.

Structural change analysis show that urbanization – fostered by an interdependent and dynamic rural-urban movement – leads to qualitative change in the structural composition of a country, from relatively high levels of agricultural labor force to high level urban manufacturing labor that ultimately raise productivity and rise in GDP. Second, structural change through rural-urban changes opens industrialization pathways by the shift of resources from agriculture to industrial manufacturing; a process that involves both labor and processing activities connecting urban and rural areas, leading again to increase in the share of manufacturing contribution overall GDP. Third, in contrast to agriculture, urban industrial production pathways for example through cluster formation are a faster road to capital accumulation. This link between urbanization (read rural-urban transformation), poverty reduction, rising living standards, and employment generation has not been given due attention among urban scholars; we hope to bridge this gap in knowledge.

While urbanization leads to poverty reduction, increased economic growth and improved interdependence between rural and urban areas, some 80 per cent of global gross domestic product is generated in cities, but so are two thirds of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. The population of the world’s cities will nearly double in the next 35 years as the space they occupy more than triples, with detrimental consequences for peri-urban and rural areas. Focusing on planning for urbanization in advance, with adequate rules and regulations and a viable financial plan, is key to managing this growth. Cities and human settlements will need proactive support from all levels of government. A dedicated global goal on sustainable cities and human settlements is relevant for our increasingly urban world, unique in its focus on space and place, transformational in the achievement of higher-level outcomes, empowering for local governments and timely given the narrow window of opportunity that exists to influence the growth of future cities. This goal will also need to promote a positive, mutually-reinforcing relationship between cities and their hinterlands.

From the above, our post-2015 discourse must depart from the traditional (and false) dichotomy of urban and rural, because for both to be sustainable they must develop in tandem. Recognizing the urban-rural continuum also highlights how partnerships, collaboration and unity in action can yield dividends for all people, regardless of age, gender and whether they live in urban or rural areas. Positive outcomes include food security, increased employment, improved equity and better governance. The Open Working Group explicitly addressed urban-rural linkages under proposed targets to increase investment in rural infrastructure and support positive economic, social and environmental links between urban, peri-urban and rural areas by strengthening national and regional development planning.

The dialogue will explore the role of UN-Habitat in the post 2015 agenda and the role of urban – rural linkages in harnessing the transformative power of urbanization for sustainable development.

The objectives of the dialogue are as follows:

  • Discuss the role of UN-Habitat in the finalization of the Post-2015 Development Agenda;
  • Discuss the role of UN-Habitat in the monitoring and implementation of the Post-2015 Development Agenda;
  • Discuss various strategies, challenges, approaches and experiences in urban rural linkages; and
  • Develop actionable approaches/ entry points to operationalize and streamline urban-rural linkages.

The following questions are intended to stimulate further discussion on the role of UN-Habitat in the Post 2015 development agenda:

  1. What other possibilities exist for strengthening the role of sustainable urbanization in the final intergovernmental negotiations on the post-2015 development agenda?
  2. Can we avoid some of the shortcomings of the Millennium Development Goals by targeting the drivers of unsustainable urbanization and quantifying ambitions proportionally?
  3. Whereas the proposed sustainable development goals focus explicitly on the importance of land for poverty reduction, gender and food security, land is not explicitly addressed within the context of sustainable cities and human settlements. How might this be remedied?
  4. How can sustainable urbanization enhance endogenous resource mobilization for the implementation of the post-2015 development agenda?
  5. Which mechanisms might be optimal for the implementation and monitoring of the sustainable development goals and what might be the corresponding coordination and implementation role for UN-Habitat?
  6. What might be the role of UN-Habitat in localizing the implementation of the sustainable development goals?
  7. How can member States, in collaboration with UN-Habitat, its partners and other urban stakeholders, ensure that the sustainable development goals lead to meaningful transformation?The questions intended to guide the discussions on enhancing urban-rural linkages across the continuum of human settlements to harness the transformative power of urbanization for sustainable development:
  8. How can Governments manage a system of urban and rural areas such that economic connectivity, environmental sustainability and social wellbeing are maximized?
  9. What is the role of various stakeholders in relation to urban-rural linkages, including different levels of government, private sector and workers’ unions?
  10. Which types of metropolitan governance mechanisms would improve the function of metropolitan regions, including the role of small, intermediate and secondary towns?
  11. Which practices have successfully used participatory methods for urban planning where the needs for future generations are fully incorporated and given priority?
  12. Building transport infrastructure, development of secondary cities, training and capacity-building, public-private partnerships, and appropriate institutional frameworks are all key to achieve better urban-rural linkages. What can be done to promote these?
  13. How can urban sprawl be managed, particularly in high-potential agricultural areas?
  14. Which practices have successfully integrated urban and rural financial and capital markets and services?
  15. How can transportation corridors be managed such that economic connectivity is maximized?
  16. How can UN-Habitat and its partners ensure tenure security and protection of land and other related rights of women, poor and vulnerable groups in the context of the urban-rural continuum?
  17. How can UN-Habitat support national and local governments in developing effective legal and institutional frameworks that are locally relevant and advance the principles of the rule of law and human rights?
  18. How can UN-Habitat and its partners ensure balanced territorial planning that addresses urban-rural migration now occurring in certain regions?
Time Programme item

10:00-10:20 Welcome & Introduction to the Dialogue
Opening:
President of the GC
Welcome:
Dr. Joan Clos, Executive Director of UN-Habitat
Moderator:
Mark Eddo, International Journalist and Managing Director, Mark Eddo Media

10:20-10:40  Key Note Speaker: Aromar Revi,  Director of the Indian Institute for Human Settlements (IIHS), member of the Leadership Council of the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN), co-chair of its Urban thematic group 

10:40-11:00 Interactive Q & A Session

11:00-12:00 Panel Session(1 hr)
Role of UN-Habitat in the finalization, monitoring and implementation of the Post-2015 Development AgendaFranz Marré, Head of Division (Water; Urban Development; Transport), German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development
Reference: How can we avoid the shortcomings of the MDGs by targeting the drivers of unsustainable urbanization in the context of sustainable cities and human settlements in the proposed SDGs Christine Platt, Honorary Vice-presidents & Immediate past president of the Commonwealth Association of Planners
Reference: How can sustainable urbanization enhance endogenous resource mobilization for the implementation of the post-2015 development agenda; Emilia Sáiz, Deputy Secretary General, UCLG
Reference: What might be the role of Local and Sub-National authorities in localizing the implementation of the SDGs? Ana Falú,  professor at the National University of Argentina in Cordoba, & Director of the Research Institute on Housing and Habitat
Reference: What are the gender and human rights perspectives in the monitoring and implementation of the SDGs?

12:30-12:55 Interactive Q & A Session

12:55-13:00 Wrap up remarks by Key Note Speaker: Aromar Revi,  Director of the Indian Institute for Human Settlements (IIHS), member of the Leadership Council of the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN), co-chair of its Urban thematic group

13:00-15:00 Lunch Break

15:00-16:00 First Round of Panel (1h)
Based on the panelist experiences and references, explore the different strategies, challenges, and approaches of urban rural linkages Dr. Cecilia Tacoli, Principle Researcher and Co-Head, Human Settlements Group; International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED)
Reference:  Building transport infrastructure, development of secondary cities, training and capacity-building, public-private partnerships, and appropriate institutional frameworks are all key to achieve urban-rural linkages. What can be done to promote this?Patrick Mutabwire, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Local Government, Uganda
Reference: How can Governments manage a system of urban and rural areas such that economic connectivity, environmental sustainability and social wellbeing are maximized?Mustafa Tunc Soyer, Mayor, Seferihisar, Turkey
Reference: What is the role of various stakeholders in relation to urban-rural linkage, including different levels of government, private sector and workers’ unions?

16:00-16:30 Interactive Q & A Session

16:30-17:30 Second Round of Panel (1hr)Explore actionable ideas: What are the priorities in operationalizing Urban – Rural linkages approaches? Jean Claude Mbwentchou,  Minister of Housing and Urban Development of CameroonReference: How can UN-Habitat support national and local governments in developing effective legal and institutional frameworks that are locally relevant to advance urban-rural linkages? Davinder Lamba, Executive Director of the Mazingira Institute/ Former President of Habitat International Coalition (HIC)
Reference: How can UN-Habitat and its partners ensure tenure security and protection of land and other related rights of women, poor and vulnerable groups in the context of the urban-rural continuum?

Prof.  Ivan Turok, Executive Director in the Economic Performance and Development Unit of the (HSRC)
Reference: What are the roles of National Urban Policies in enhancing urban-rural linkages?


17:30-17:50 Interactive Q & A Session

17:50-18:00 Wrap Up: Christine Platt, Honorary Vice-presidents & Immediate past president of the Commonwealth Association of Planners

Dr. Cecilia Tacoli is a Principle Researcher and Co-Head, Human Settlements Group; International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) Cecilia’s work explores how the relation between urban and rural areas, people and enterprises are transformed by urbanization processes. She has written and edited several publications on this topic, and has researched the links between migration, environmental change and urbanization with partners in Africa, Asia and Latin America. She is especially interested in their impact on urban and rural food consumption and security. Her publication include the Earth scan reader in Urban – Rural Linkages (Earthscan, 2006); and ‘Urbanization and its implications for food and farming’ (2010), with David Satterthwaite and Gordon McGranahan.

Aromar Revi is Director of the Indian Institute for Human Settlements (IIHS) India’s prospective independent national University for Research & Innovation addressing its challenges of urbanisation, through an integrated programme of education, research, practice and training. He is an alumnus of IIT-Delhi and the Law and Management Schools of the University of Delhi and also a Fellow of the India-China Institute at the New School University, New York. Aromar Revi is an international practitioner, consultant, researcher and educator with over thirty years of inter-disciplinary experience in public policy and governance, the political economy of reform, development, technology, sustainability and human settlements. He is a member of the Leadership Council of the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN), co-chair of its Urban thematic group, where he leads a global campaign for an urban Sustainable Development Goal (SDG).

Christine Platt, Honorary Vice-presidents & Immediate past president of the Commonwealth Association of Planners, and past president of the South African Planning Institute. She is also a principal at Christine Platt Consulting, based in Durban, South Africa. As CAP President, Christine has led Commonwealth-wide initiatives building capacity within the planning profession, supporting leadership among young planners, and developing a State of Commonwealth Cities Report. Platt completed her B.A. (Economics) at the University of Natal, Durban, in 1976, and her MTRP (UND) in 1979.

Mark Eddo is a reporter with BBC’s World’s Africa Business Report. He is devoted to changing negative perceptions of Africa to reflect the vast opportunity the continent offers. Previously, Mr Eddo was a business and economics Senior Correspondent for ITV News in London. Whilst at ITN, Mr Eddo quickly put business and economics at the heart of the ITV News schedule. He has interviewed such luminaries as Bill Gates and former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown. He distinguished himself with a series of reports on the worsening economic climate brought about by the credit crunch. He is also the Chief Executive Officer, Mark Eddo Media, Nigeria.

Ana Falú is an Argentinean architect and professor at the National University of Argentina in Cordoba,and Director of the Research Institute on Housing and Habitat. She also acts as gender expert of the Union Iberoamericana de Municipalistas and was nominated by the Executive Director of UN-Habitat to be one of the two Latin American representatives in the Advisory Group for Gender Inclusion. She was made the Regional Director of UNIFEM (now UN Women) for Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay in 2002. During 1999-2002 Dr Falú was Vice-President of the Habitat International Coalition.She founded the Argentinean NGO Centro Investigación y Servicios de Promoción del Hábitat (CISCSA), and was one of the founders of the Women and Habitat Network. She has been a university professor since 1970 and is a renowned expert in gender issues related to housing and urban policies. Since the mid-1980s she has been directing research programmes and belongs to the National Council of Technology and Scientific Research of Argentina. Internationally she has been teaching at the Masters level for more than a decade in Latin America, Spain and the Netherlands. Her current research interests include social housing policies and urban sociology; conception, design and evaluation of development programmes; a gender-focused approach to housing and urban development policies and urban violence and violence against women in cities, in both the public and private spheres.

Prof. Ivan Turok is the Executive Director in the Economic Performance and Development Unit of the (Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC). He is Honorary Professor at the Universities of Cape Town and Glasgow, and has a PhD in Economics, MSc in Planning and BSc in Geography. Before returning to South Africa and joining the HSRC in 2010 he was Professor and Research Director of the Department of Urban Studies at Glasgow University. Professor Turok’s fields of expertise include the spatial economy (regions, cities and neighbourhoods), local labour markets and economic development. His research on unemployment, regional development, city competitiveness, urban regeneration and spatial inequalities is highly cited internationally. He is a regular expert adviser to the United Nations, OECD, European Commission, SA Government, UK Government and African Development Bank. He is a board member of the Regional Studies Association and editor-in-Chief of the international journal Regional Studies, and Chairman of the City Planning Commission for Durban.

Franz-B. Marré, Head of Division (Water; Urban Development; Transport), German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development. Marré joined the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) in 1989 after having studied Law in Bonn. Since 2014 he is head of the division responsible for Water, Urban Development and Transport, which also includes Waste Management and cross-sectorial issues (the “Nexus”). Hitherto, he headed the BMZ Infrastructure Division. Prior positions in the BMZ included the Southeast Asia section (inter alia, coordination of the German Post-Tsunami reconstruction assistance in the Indian Ocean), the Organisation division, the Latin America desk (desk officer for Peru, Ecuador and Colombia) and private sector cooperation. He was posted in Washington, DC at the Interamerican Development Bank 1991–1992 and served as Development Counsellor at the German Embassy in Pretoria from 1994 to 1998.

Patrick Mutabwire, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Local Government, Uganda has over 20 years of public administration experience in local governance and overall policy development and management. He combines a number of skills which include policy formulation and implementation, project planning and management, monitoring and evaluation, financial and general management. Since 2000, Mr. Mutabwire has been key in shaping the decentralization reform in Uganda. He has spearheaded the review and refinement of the Decentralization Policy in consonance with the demands of the Sector Wide Approach (SWAp) to development. This included championing a major policy review on decentralization, in 2004 which subsequently led to a number of policy reforms in the Local Government Sector in Uganda.

Davinder Lamba, the Executive Director of the Mazingira Institute, and a former President of Habitat International Coalition (HIC). He is an environmentalist, policy analyst and architect. He is also the founder and leading light of the Operation Firimbi campaign against land grabbing and corruption in Kenya.

Mustafa Tunc Soyer, Mayor, Seferihisar, Turkey:  Mayor Soyer is also actively involved in the global advocacy on city-food systems, innovative local sustainable development and finance, resilient communities and urban-rural continuum. He is the Vice-President of CittaSlow network, represented UCLG in a number of UN sessions on development cooperation and finance. Through ICLEI – Local Governments for Sustainability, he participated at Resilient Urban Food Systems Forum in 2013, the COP Presidency Cities and Subnational Dialogue at COP19 in Warsaw in 2013 and signed the Durban Adaptation Charter. At the recent ICLEI World Congress 2015 in Seoul on 8-12 April 2015, he became the pioneering leaders of ICLEI´s CityFood Network together with Almada, Belo Horizonte Linköping and expressed his intent to comply with the Compact of Mayors launched at the Climate Summit 2014.Through the leadership of Mayor Soyer,  Seferihisar, a town with 30,000  inhabitants in the Aegean coast of Turkey, is committed to considering all aspects of the food system, from seed to plate. Education, training, and local seed exchanges take place throughout the city region. Local and regional crop varieties are encouraged. In addition to the strong political commitment, the city and the Mayor is also calling for community based, bottom up approaches, incorporating all actors, and addressing the importance of local seed systems.

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